A man has been able to control a robotic limb with a mind-reading chip implanted in his brain. It allowed Erik Sorto, from California, to sip a drink unaided for the first time in 10 years. The details, published in Science, reveal how complex bursts of electrical signals in his brain could be interpreted into commands for the arm. Experts said the results made brain-controlled robotics closer to being a reality. Mr Sorto was shot at the age of 21.

The damage to his spinal cord left him paralysed from the neck down.

Two tiny sensors were implanted into his brain to monitor the activity of around 100 neurons. Previous attempts at thought-controlled robotics have focused on the motor cortex – the region responsible for the action of individual muscles. However, the US team tried implanting the chips in the posterior parietal cortex – the part of the brain that comes up with the initial intention. It is the difference between deciding to pick up a mug or telling your hand to move towards it. The team hopes this approach will be more intuitive.

One of the researchers, Prof Richard Andersen from Caltech, told the BBC News website: “The first time he tried the robotic limb he could form his hand to mirror one of the student’s hands as if shaking hands – for him it was a huge thrill.” He has improved with training so that he can lift a drink to his mouth and also control a cursor on a computer screen.

Mr Sorto said: “I joke around with the guys that I want to be able to drink my own beer, to be able to take a drink at my own pace, when I want to take a sip out of my beer and to not have to ask somebody to give it to me. “I really miss that independence. I think that if it were safe enough, I would really enjoy grooming myself – shaving, brushing my own teeth. That would be fantastic.”